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this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2024
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privacy
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You could set up a PiHole on your local network, and have the VPN's DNS be secondary.
Wouldn't that still leak your DNS? I guess that's not a big deal if you don't care about timing correlation attacks.
Why would it? The PiHole would be on your local network, so it would never need to go past your router. So the request itself would be private, what matters is what you do with the response. Theoretically, the PiHole would only give responses for things it'll block (usually directing it to localhost or something), and have no response for everything else (check your configs).
So if you get a response from the PiHole, you route the request locally, which does nothing. If you don't get one, you'll check the secondary DNS, which is provided by the VPN service.
You should certainly confirm this before completely trusting it, but it should work fine.